BiEDS OF Indiana. 633 



Kange. — Interior of North America, east of Kocky Mountains, 

 breeding on the eastern shores of Hudson Bay; migrating south in 

 winter through the Mississippi Valley to the Gulf coast; occasional on 

 Atlantic Coast. 



Nest and Eggs, unknown. 



Eare migrant. Dr. Rufus Haymond first identified this goose in 

 Indiana. (Ind. Geol. Eept., 3869, p. 331.) Prof. B. W. Evermann 

 found three specimens in the Terre Haute market April 2,, 1887, 

 which were killed about eighteen miles south of that city, in Sullivan 

 County. A few days later he saw another of these geese in the city 

 market. 



Mr. Chas. Dury reports it from Chalmers and English Lake. Mr, 

 J. 0. Dunn informs me that there is a mounted specimen in the Hyde 

 Park (Chicago) High School, labeled Wolf Lake, Indiana. December 

 18, 1884, he also reports seeing twelve specimens in South Water 

 Street market, Chicago, March 29. and others again April 7, 1891, all 

 of which had been killed in Illinois. Mrs. Jane L. Hine states that a 

 taxidermist at Hudson, Steuljen County, has a Blue Goose that he 

 says was shot early in the spring of 1891 in a swamp not far from 

 Stony Lake, Dekalb County. Mr. Mortimer Levering, of Lafayette, 

 has two of these geese, which Avere shot and eripjiled from a flock near 

 Morocco, Newton County, in 1892. He has kept them, and one Snow 

 Goose taken at the same time, for five years, arid they have become 

 quite tame. 



Dr. McChesne}-, in his account of the birds of northern Dakota, 

 says they are found there, in the fall, mixed with flecks of Snow Geese, 

 but he never observed tliem in tlie spring. As the above references will 

 show; most of those noted in Indiana and the vicinity of Chicago have 

 been seen in the spring. 



26. Gknus AX-ER B«issox. 



a'. Fore pari of liead and feathers at base of bill white, or fore part of head dusky 

 and nail of bill, black. A. albifrons gambeli (Hartl.) 54 



54. (171a). Anser albifrons gambeli (IIartl). 



American White-fronted Goose. 

 Synonyms, Laughing Goosf, Gray Bkakt. 



Adult. — Fore part of head and forehead, white, bordered behind with 

 blackish; upper tail coverts, sides of rump and crissum, white; under 

 parts whitish blotched with black; rest of head and neck grajdsh- 

 brown, shading lighter as it Joins the breast; back dark gray, the feath- 

 ers tipped with broM^n; greater coverts and secondaries bordered with 



